. stay with cnn for the latest results. wanda sykes is here tomorrow night, and right now itisjohnrobertsonwith "ac 360." john? >> than you, larry. big night for you as primary results come in across the country. former presidential candidate john mccain fighting to keep his seat in arizona and sarah palin endorsement factor, and will the mama grizzlies roar tonight. and two billionaires, yes, billionaires running in florida and spending billions of their own dollars. we will see what it brought them. >>> and shirley sherrod saying thanks, but no thanks to her old job in the government. see what she has to say about that and why she said no to her old job and why she plans to sue. that the big "360 interview." >>> and why not wyclef? we will ask wyclef jean about why he is not being am loued to run for president, and why he will fight to be on the ballot. >>> and john king is doing the honors the night, and he will be drilling down into the numbers looking for clues to voter behavior tonight, an into november. right now, he is joining us from washington with the latest. hey, john

talking close to 100 phone calls to this phone back and forthtojohn. >>but he did love her. >> i told some people at the clinic, i wish i had someone who looked at me the way john looked at sues youan. >> the question for the jury was, did he love her to death? >> the motive was love lost. >> solving the valentine's day mystery. captions paid for by nbc-universal television >>> thanks for joining us, i'm ann curry. that kind of thing almost never happens in a real trial. it did in the trial you're about to see. one last unexpected twist with a case you're about to see. starting with a murder on valentine's day. here's dennis murphy. ♪ >> reporter: a dozen roses, check. how about a candlelit dinner and a champagne toast to love? isn't that what valentine's day is supposed to be about? we all know red is for the ribbon on the box of chocolate not for the pool of blood in the master bath. maybe chicago gangsters get killed on valentine's day but not pretty doctors' wives in oklahoma city. >> it was huge. it had all of the appeal a romance novel gone bad. it was the high society do

. stay with cnn for the latest results. wanda sykes is here tomorrow night.now,johnatac "360." >> good evening, john roberts here for special coverage tonight. the latest, cnn is predicting a winner in florida's gop governor's primary and expecting to hear a victory speech. and bill mccollum came out and said, it will be a long night and go to the wee hours of the morning and maybe didn't know what you know. >> cnn has scrubbed the numbers pretty good and checked in with our sources and are projecting rick scott, a businessman, conservative, ran a health care company, anti-abortion, challenged the obama health care law, supports the arizona immigration law and says maybe florida needs something like that. rick scott will be the republican gubernatorial nomination. bill mccollum was his opponent, a former congressman. 47% for rick scott and 73% for mccollum and 92% of the precincts are in, we are projecting rick scott the winner of this race, a consequential re-election against democrat alex sink in the race for florida governor. on the democratic side, congressman kendrick me

quote about anthony's attacks on you. >> don't worry.>>john, aska question about prop 8. >> congressman, you talk about the activist judges, judges imposing things and talked with joe this morning about loving v. virginia and the court said the same thing. you can't discriminate based on race and marriage. how's that different?

. see you tomorrow. >>> what ashow,johnvoighthe is here to talk about the tea party and an incredible story. one that quite frankly, if you made this stuff up, nobody would believe it but it's a powerful story that is true about politics and ethics, some of the most unpleasant stories but we'll talk about find out when andrew and sherry young tell us the story as they were witnesses to john edwards undoing. that is also going to be on our show. an dries drew has written the book called "the politician." what about the treaty that has been signed this week? casey mcfarland we'll talk about that, does it make you safer or not. and by popular demand, kelly wright is back me and little rockers will rock your world with a steve miller classic. all of that on huckabee. glad to have you with us. [ applause ] >> tonight we also have some very tragic news, many of you may remember it was just a few weeks ago when my friend country music superstar was here and he sang the emotional story of his little granddaughter haley. i'm say last sunday afternoon, haley passed away. our hearts a

commission, the department of public works, the artcommission,johnthomasfrom the department of public works. i could go on forever. but the individuals who all made this the possibility are on the laguna honda honor roll. but i truly believe that the greatest degree of thanks and goes to the people of san francisco, who from the start, from our early beginning of history, have said yes. we want a laguna honda. other communities across this country and even in the world do not have a public hospital devoted to rehabilitation and skilled nursing care. we do. and when we talk about putting that bond issue, that great big bond issue -- there were people who said i do not think we can do it. but i always knew we could. and the secret weapon was always the families of those for whom at laguna honda has cared for for so long over the years with the great quality of care that we have. and the voters did vote overwhelmingly to rebuild laguna honda. so for those naysayers in other parts of the country who say, "maybe san francisco once knew how to do it," i say we still do. we have still got th

. >>reporter:johnmccainis one who was able to buck the trend, but it wasn't easy. his big victory last night came only after he transformed himself into a harder line conservative, especially on immigration. >> and complete the dang fence. >> senator, you're one of us. >> reporter: miller's lead is about to 1,500 votes, and diane, there are still more than 7,000 ballots to be counted. so, we may not know the results here now, we are told for two weeker or longer. >> nail-biting time. thank you, jon karl. >>> and we turn next to iraq. as you know, the u.s. is pulling out combat troops. the president giving a big speech about it next week. but today, insurgents reminded the world they are still there, and still brutal. they launched attack after attack across the country, achling their bombs at iraqi soldiers and police now taking over from the americans. at least 56 were killed. and our dan harris was with some american forces when the word got out of the blood assault as it came in. >> reporter: out on a mission in mosul today with the u.s. ar's desert rogues battalion, we could hear the rep

surprise. it seems the political establishment not the outsiders have a leg up today.arizona,johnmccainappears to be poised for victory but it came with a price. kelly o'donnell's live in arizona. winning ugly comes to mind, kelly. >> reporter: well, chuck, one of the analysts i talked to here watching this race day by day says that john mccain didn't just want to win, he wanted to pummel and crush his opponent. i asked mccain that directly, too. he said, no, no, no. he's spent more than $20 million and back in the early part of this year, he was one of those incumbents identified as being potentially vulnerable and a very aggressive candidate in j.d. hayworth, a radio talk show host who had served six terms in congress and he was pounding mccain every day on the radio show, mostly talking about the issue of immigration while things changed over the course of these months and mccain has tried to do everything he could to make j.d. hayworth an unappealing choice to voters here. and when i talked to people, sometimes they'll say they're not that crazy about mccain but they don't w

impressive man, the neighbor. his namewasjohntennie,a 65-year-old oil exploration scientist with a ph.d from m.i.t. a korean war vet, a former college professor, a world traveling consultant. he soon fit right in, joined a local church, befriended down hill neighbors, got involved in local conservation efforts. >> he just loved carmel valley. when you see wild spaces like that you want to preserve them. >> this is john's daughter. though you can probably tell from her accent that she is not a california girl. fascinating, isn't it, how fate can dictate the shape of a life? and that is part of our story, too. it was serendipity as much as anything that produced the conditions, the isolation, without which none of this would have happened. john happened to be at a conference in new york years ago. he met a woman there, a doctor, a european doctor. and since john kenny could do his work anywhere, that's how he became john kenny of france. here in this ancient city, kenny and his wife maria, the gynecologist, raised their two adopted daughters, who in their way adored him. >> well, my

][john]i love these new cell phones. [ wife ] he just got a new phone and he can't stop using it. boom! profile pic. [ cell phone rings ] do you guys needs a moment? since john is always on his phone, we thought he'd like using wells fargo mobile banking. just paid the electric bill. wow. he's able to pay his bills, check his balance. wow. [ banker ] even transfer money between accounts. i can tell you what's playing, if you like. i can tell you, too. see? oh. [ male announcer ] wells fargo. with you when life is mobile. ♪ playing himself in there's something about mary. but his performance has been even better >>> in 1998, brett favre made his acting debut playing himself in there is something about mary but his performance has been better the last few summers in his own version of groundhog day. he was back at vikings practice this afternoon and announced that this will be his final season, of course, until he changes his mind again next off season. the silver fox will make $16.5 million in what will be his 20th season in the nfl. >> i can promise you this, uhm, not that i had ever

known for her ability to find drugs and other contraband.andjohnfisher,special agent internal affairs for the tennessee department of corrections. all four star in the new a & e documentary series "the squad: prison police." and when it comes to investigating crimes, police have it tough enough on the outside. on the inside, it's a whole other story. watch jason and john at work. this is a clip from "the squad." >> jason, he's my boss. he's hard on me. for the record, he's about six pounds more than i am. the relationship i have with john fisher is beyond just a professional one. we're also friends. we keep each other straight. i give him a hard time every chance i get. and if i've gone more than a day or two without giving him a hard time, i come up with a reason. >> john can work them out, too. >> yeah, this place -- very health conscience. they're of similar stature, we say. a bright light behind them and looking at the silhouette, you wouldn't though them apart. >> jerry, you're the director of this program. what is it, the group of you do? >> well, the department of corre

. they're not used to the urban visht: >> the outsidersarejohnshopkinsstudents.e >> he outsiders are johns hopkins studentn >> the outsiders are johns hopkins students.env >> the outsiders are johns hopkins studenti >> the outsiders are johns hopkins students.r >> the outsiders are johns hopkins studente >> the outsiders are johns hopkins students. >> the outsiders are johns hopkins students.o >> he outsiders are johns hopkins studentn >> the outsiders are johns hopkins studentm >> the outsiders are johns >> the outsiders are johns hopkins studentn >> the outsiders are johns hopkins studentt 3 p> the outsiders are johns hopkins students.. >> the outsiders are johns hopkins students. >> when the criminal element sees there's a present they tend to stay away. they never know when they're going to be watched or confronted by people in the neighbor. >> itthelps a lot. stcompw>> okay here's what ou to keep thieves from breaking into your car. don't leave any electronics in plain sight. in your trunk.a in your your trunb in yourut them in car make sure to put them in your trunl in yourrcar

connors. thank youandjohnpredecessorstole away from us, michael lane. thank you, michael, wherever you are. lastly, my personal reflection on this building. this building, to me, is truly a monument to the tremendous capacity of generosity in the heart of sentences go. the voters of san francisco in their great willingness to support this facility will always have this hospital as a sign of their willingness to help those most in need. these neighborhoods that surround this facility, i think, consider laguna honda at their private treasure. we really do look at this hospital as our own. we love this hospital. we have great care and great love for the residents of this hospital. on behalf of the neighboring residents, to all of the current residents of the hospital, this is for you. we are thrilled we were able to do this for you. thank you, everyone. [applause] >> the work of the health department would never be possible without its commission. the commission is the governing body. you have been around to this project long enough to see some fantastic commissioners who ha

havejohnheilemann,norah o'donnell and kelly o'donnell and "newsweek"'s howard fineman. barack obama has past his 49 birthday and he is president and he is one lucky guy. remember obama won his first race in the u.s. senate just six years ago. republicans ended up with alan keyes. mccain who had been a strong candidate faded in defending the bush record. and this year, while the numbers don't look good for the democrats. the g.o.p. could be split between the tea party candidates and the regular party. and that obama luck may hold when he runs again in 2012. modren persidents have one strike in terms unless they face a commanding opponent. john, he has been lucky? >> he has been lucky, but one exception, hillary clinton, who is a rival when he ran for the nomination. right now, it's fascinating. you think of obama's approval rating has fallen and yet over the course of the first 18 months, unlike in past presidential elections, you don't see republicans out there. there have been two, mitt romney and pawlenty. and the white house have said, couldn't we be lucky enough to end up with a

>> evening. tonight kicks off a special week. tavis: this marks the releaseofjohnmellencampsalbum. we'll hear the first of five new songs he's going to share with us, all this week. the new c.d. was recorded in historic places throughout the american south, including the first african baptist church in savannah, georgia and sun studios in memphis. the disk is in stores tomorrow. later on the performance of the first single, save some time. glad you joined us, a conversation with a rock and roll hall-of-famer. the first of five performances this week. >> three months ago, on the other end, john mellencamp calling me to ask if i would consider doing something special on the show in conjunction with the release of his new record. took me three seconds or less to say yes to his being on the show tonight and for that matter, every night this week. in addition to his new c.d., no better than this, he's about to celebrate the 25th anniversary, hard to believe, 25 years of farm aid, the fund-raising concerts have raised millions over the years, with this year's event being held in m

arizona.senatorjohnmccainhas made a hard move to the right to counter former congressman j.d. haywor hayworth. mccain has a 20-point lead after spending $21 million on the primary battle alone. the tea party favorite isn't going down without a fight. nbc's kelly o'donnell is live in phoenix and interviewed john mccain. what's the senator have to say about this big move on immigration? >> reporter: well, john mccain bristles when he's challenged about moving hard to the right. that's criticism he's been taking for quite a while now and he argues against it. it's a more nuance position. in interviewing him i think he threaded a needle perhaps. what he basically is saying is that he's always supported trying to have a secure border fence. that's his view. and that now his emphasis has changed. that's his word. emphasis has changed to be more focused on what the people of arizona want because of changing conditions. back in 2006 when he worked with ted kennedy to try to create comprehensive immigration reform including a path to citizenship, he said times have changed. the people

packed hour ahead framed by these big questions. istonight'sjohnmccain'slast stand or yet another new beginning? is the tea party losing steam? and are republicans ready to govern? that question is front and center tonight, exactly ten weeks until all of america votes. the man who would be the speaker of the house if the republicans win big delivered what was billed as a major speech today. most of his ideas were familiar. and this was gop leader john boehner's big headline. >> president obama should ask for and accept the res ig vision of remaining members of the economic team starting with secretary geithner, larry summer, the head of the national economic council. >> president obama was on vacation. it was left to the vice president to deliver the scornful rebuttal >>. >> for eight xwreefrs we arrived in the west wing, mr. boehner ran the economy into the ground. >> your choices will shape the national debiefrts taxes, spending or to repeal or change any new health care law. what will we learn? let's begin with democratic strategist james carville. and with me, john avalon, aut

fourdays.johnleesaid he couldn't just ring the nuns embering the nuns given uld never have forgiven him for doing nothing. >> please go. >> reporter: he asked us to leave him in peace. five years later, we went to five years find john, and we did, on the same corner. john has chosen to stay, living in new orleans working in eighbors cam he told us while burying the woman, neighbors came and told him stories about miss vera. >> it was just the most inhuman, degrading thing i -- >> reporter: he learned she was married mmother of two, who had a constant smile and a meticulous garden. ave failed her. have expected her country to have failed her. >> we were left here. it was just neighbors helping neighbors. food, water, burying the dead. >> reporter: basically, the e ministration let you down. >> they abandoned us. >> reporter: and where vera once hrinea shrine now remains. to john lee, vera's memorial is m emblem of lingering grief. a memento of neglect. mementoe you, mr. john. nei love you, too. >> reporter: a close friend of urya smith helped john berry vera that day. she, l

between beijing and washington. joining me this weekarejohndonnelley,laurenthompson,johnbarry,and john bennett. gentlemen, welcome to the show. let's start off with the number of reports that are crashing down and the strength in washington about spending me defense. defense secretary gates has announced a plan to save $100 billion over the coming five years. the defense business board is trying to fuel the debate by suggesting that the joint forces command be closed and 100,000 civilian jobs be gotten rid of. an alternative qdr panel comes out and says we oughta spend more me defense? >> you'll see less money for defense. with a five-year defense plan later in theory, uh, 1% increase in the, in the out years, i don't know anybody who agrees it'll happen. the best it'll be is zero, the best that could happen is level. as for the panel saying we should spend anything, everybody says it won't go anywhere. report of the deficit commission run by simpson and bowl. they're going to say we have to get the deficit down. >> i agree, when you said they're cutting $100 billion out of 2012 t

. >> reporter: you might say the army wasinjohnbrostrom'sdna. his father dave was armstrong long before the ad campaign. >> it's a great institution. i spent my whole life in the army. >> reporter: dave brostrom was a retired colonel after 30 years. when john was in high school, they moved to hawaii. it proved a tropical paradise for an adventurous kid. >> he loved to surf, golf. >> reporter: one of the great joyce of jonathan's life was his son jace, who lived with his mother on the mainland. john loved to surf with his boy. at the university of hawaii, john joined army rotc. his parents were with him every step of the way. >> he grew up as a military brat. he tried to follow in my footsteps. made me very proud. >> reporter: john volunteered for the infantry. that choice surprised his parents, especially dave, a helicopter pilot who had commanded an aviation unit in desert storm. >> when he said i'm going to be in an infantry, i kind of cringed. >> we tried to talk him out of it. >> he wanted to be in the fight? >> he wanted to. >> at the front lines. >> at the front. >> reporte

. with major funding fromthejohnd.and catherine t. macarthur foundation. helping to build a more just world. and additional funding from the park foundation. committed to raising public awareness. >> tonight on frontline, the battle over the power of the presidency and a new way of looking at the constitution. >> they believe that a president could do as he liked even if congress, even if the supreme court said he couldn't. >> for three decades, vice president dick cheney led a secretive and bitter behind- + presidential power. >> he believes that the president should have the final word, indeed the only word, on all matters within the executive branch. >> after 9/11, there were enhanced presidential powers to detain, render, interrogate,j]y wiretap. >> mr. presidentit is time to have some checks and balances in this country! >> it's a direct showdown constitutionally between the president and congress. >> the latest clash is over secret justice department findings authorizing the cia to engage in the harshest interrogation techniques ever. >> mr. president, we are a democracy! >

john? theresilient elizabeth edwards is next -- on "larry king live." >> larry: it's a great pleasure to welcome back to "larry king live" one of my favorite people, elizabeth edwards, the author of the number-one "new york times" best-seller "resilience, reflections on the burdens and gifts of facing life's adversities." it's now out in paperback. with a very candid and compelling new afterword. elizabeth is a senior fellow at the center for american progress, working on health care issues. it's always good to see her. you look so good. you got to tell me, how are you feeling? >> i feel great actually. you know, i'm always going to have some sort of treatment. i'm on chemotherapy now. had chemotherapy this morning, as a matter of fact, in north carolina. sometimes the treatment gets you down, but the disease is not getting me down. >> larry: what does the chemo do? you're in stage 4, right? >> i'm stage 4. the chemo i'm taking right now actually has a lot of effect on my blood. so i'm not supposed to cut my cuticles or floss or do things that might introduce infection. and s

going to come back in paperback. if it came back in paperback, when i wrote thepaperback,john, myhusband and i were, were still together. when the paperback came out, we had separated. >> larry: publicly expect to read about it. >> if the book ended with our being together, then it wasn't -- it would be weird. it wouldn't be an accurate book. that's actually why i included a lot of the stuff in it. i wanted the book to be accurate. i didn't want it to be sensational. but i wanted it to be accurate. >> larry: but you also took out some things. >> yep. >> larry: why? >> well, in the paperback, i don't think i took out -- >> larry: well, no, some things from the original. >> right. there were things that i had that, you know, sort of were bothering me about the way the story was getting told. and, you know, so i sort of felt like i needed to answer them. i also want to move on in my life. so i don't want to answer them. i don't want to get into a shouting -- you know, the last person on "larry king" gets to tell the story, you know, of the way it is. i don't want that. i want to mov

tavis: good evening. i am tavis smiley. we brought up a week of music and conversationwithjohnmellencamp.his cd "no better than this" is the 25th of his career. he will perform "pink houses". he will be on hand in milwaukee to celebrate the 25th anniversary of farm aid. his u.s. tour kicks off in indiana. >> all i know is his name is james, and he needs extra help with his reading. >> i am james. >> yes. >> to everyone making a difference, you help us all live better. >> nationwide insurance proudly supports tavis smiley. tavis and nationwide insurance, working to improve financial literacy and the economic empowerment that comes with it. >> ♪ nationwide is on your side ♪ >> and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. [captioning made possible by kcet public television] tavis: tonight we hear two songs from john mellencamp. brielle ofone last the new project. the disk is called "no better than this" and here is john performing "thinking about you". it is not my nature ♪ ♪ i sat by the phone last night waiting for you to call ♪ beenust

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